Full Judgment Text
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REPORTABLE
2024 INSC 174
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.6493 OF 2014
SANGAM MILK PRODUCER COMPANY LTD.
…APPELLANT(S)
Versus
THE AGRICULTURAL MARKET COMMITTEE & ORS.
…RESPONDENT(S)
WITH
C.A. No. 6494/2014
C.A. No. 6495/2014
C.A. No. 6496/2014
C.A. No. 6497/2014
C.A. No. 6498/2014
J U D G M E N T
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
Ashwani Kumar
Date: 2024.03.05
16:15:45 IST
Reason:
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SUDHANSHU DHULIA, J.
1. Two questions arise in these appeals for our determination.
The first question is whether “ghee” is a “product of livestock”
under the provisions of The Andhra Pradesh (Agricultural
Produce and Livestock) Markets Act, 1966 (hereinafter referred
to as “the Act”) and the second would be whether the
Government notification (G.O. Ms. No.286 dated 05.07.1994),
which inter alia notifies “ghee” as one of the products of
livestock for the purpose of regulation of purchase and sale of
“ghee” in all notified market areas was published after due
compliance of the procedure contemplated under the
provisions of the Act?
2. In the erstwhile State of Andhra Pradesh, the above Act was
brought with the purpose to consolidate and amend the laws
regulating the purchase and sale of agricultural produce,
livestock and products of livestock, along with establishment
of markets in connection therewith. The aim was to secure
effective and remunerative price of commodities by bringing
producers and traders face to face thereby eliminating
middlemen and do away with some other earlier unethical
trade practices, which were exploiting agriculturists and
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farmers. In other words, it was a farmer friendly legislation.
The commodities which were to be regulated were not only
agricultural produce but also livestock as well as products of
livestock. Whereas livestock has been defined under Section
2(v) and products of livestock has been defined under Section
2(xv). Both the Sections are reproduced below:
(v) 'livestock' means cows, buffaloes, bullocks,
bulls, goats and sheep, and includes poultry, fish
and such other animals as may be declared by
the Government by notification to be livestock for
the purposes of this Act;
(xv) 'products of livestock' means such
products of livestock as may be declared by the
Government by notification, to be products of
livestock for the purposes of this Act.
3. Under sub-Section (1) of Section 3 of the Act, the Government
has to initially publish a draft notification declaring its
intention of regulating purchase and sale of proposed notified
agricultural produce, livestock or products of livestock in an
area. It is only after hearing objections from public, it finally
publishes its notification under sub-Section (3) of Section 3
declaring the area to be a ‘notified area’ in respect of such
agricultural produce, livestock and products of livestock.
Under Sub-Section (4) of Section 3 the Government also has a
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power to exclude from a notified area, any area earlier included
in it.
4. After a notification is made under Section 3, there comes the
process of notification under Section 4 of the Act. Under
Section 4 (1) of the Act, a process is given wherein the
Government further notifies a market committee for every
notified area. Under Sub Section (3) of Section 4, the market
committee is empowered to establish markets for the purchase
and sale of any notified agricultural produce, livestock or
products of livestock. After the establishment of markets by
the market committee under Section 4 (3), the Government
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declares by a notification under Section 4 (4) , the ‘notified
market area’ for the purposes of the Act in respect of the
notified products.
In short, the above provisions provide that first there will be
a larger physical unit called “notified area” wherein the market
committee shall establish markets and thereafter, through a
notification u/s 4 (4), the Govt. declares a “notified market
area” in respect of the notified products.
1
Section 4 (4) stands omitted vide the Andhra Pradesh (Agricultural Produce and Livestock)
Markets (Amendment) Act, 2015.
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5. In the year 1968, the State of Andhra Pradesh had issued a
notification u/s 3 (3) of the Act declaring “notified areas” in the
State where “ghee” was included in Schedule II of the said
notification as a livestock product. Thereafter, in the year
1971, a notification u/s 4 (4) was published, which declared
the ‘notified market areas’ in respect of the respondent-
committee, i.e. Agricultural Market Committee, Guntur and
“ghee” was specified as a notified product. However, in 1972
the 1971 notification was amended and “ghee” was taken out
of the list of notified livestock products in respect of the
respondent-committee, and it remained so for a considerable
period of time. We must clarify here that both these
notifications i.e., notifications of 1971 & 1972 were issued u/s
4 (4) of the Act and not u/s 3 (3) of the Act.
6. Later, on 15.07.1994, the Govt of A.P. published a general
notification directing all the notified markets within the State
of AP to regulate all the products notified in Schedule II of the
1968 Notification, which also included Ghee.
7. It is this notification of the year 1994 which came to be
challenged by the producers of livestock products and which
has now before us for determination. This notification was
challenged before the Andhra Pradesh High Court on two
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grounds. The first challenge was that “ghee” is not a “product
of livestock” and therefore cannot be regulated and notified.
The second ground for challenge was that there is a procedure
which is laid down under the law, mainly under Section 3 of
the Act which prescribes the process i.e., first a draft
notification has to be published, objections are invited against
the notification and only after hearing such objections can this
notification be made. It was contended that this process has
not been followed and therefore the notification is bad.
8. This matter ultimately went to a Full Bench of the Andhra
Pradesh High Court in Writ Petition No. 24818 of 2008 titled
Kommisetty Nammalwar & Co. Guntur v. Agricultural
Market Committee, Tenali & Ors. ( 2009) SCC OnLine AP
317 and by a 2:1 majority, the Andhra Pradesh High Court
rejected the argument of the appellants and upheld the
notification of the year 1994, holding that the notification
under challenge is not under Section 3 but under Section 4 of
the Act, and is valid and moreover “ghee” is a livestock
product. Based on the said judgment the Writ Petitions filed
by the appellants in Civil Appeal Nos. 6493 of 2014 (M/s
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Guntur District Milk Production ), 6494 of 2014 (M/s.
Lakshmi Das Premji Ghee Merchants), 6496 of 2014 (M/s
Durga Dairy Ltd.), 6497 of 2014 (The Krishna District Milk
Producers Co-operative Union Ltd., Vijaywada) & 6498 of 2014
(M/s. Karnataka Co-operative Milk Producers Federation
Limited) were also dismissed by the Andhra Pradesh High
Court. The decision of the Full Bench in Kommisetty
Nammalwar (supra) upholding the validity of the 1994
notification is also under challenge before us in C.A No.6495
of 2014.
9. We have heard learned counsel for the parties at length and
have perused the material on record.
10. The argument that “ghee” is not a product of livestock is
baseless, and bereft of any logic. The contrary argument that
“ghee” is indeed a product of livestock is logically sound.
Livestock has been defined under Section 2(v) of the Act, where
Cows and buffalos are the livestock. Undisputedly, “ghee” is a
product of milk which is a product of the livestock. The
majority opinion of the Full Bench decision in Kommisetty
Nammalwar (supra) while referring to the judgments of this
2
Vide Order dated 02.01.2024 passed by this Court in IA No.241663 of 2023 in CA No.6493
of 2014 name of appellant is amended as Sangam Milk Producer Company Ltd.
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Court in Park Leather Industry (P) Ltd. v. State of U.P.
(2001) 3 SCC 135; Kishan Lal v. State of Rajasthan, AIR
1990 SC 2269; Ram Chandra Kailash Kumar v. State of
U.P. 1980 Supp (1) SCC 27 and Smt. Sita Devi (Dead) by
LRs. v. State of Bihar & Ors. 1995 Supp (1) SSC 670 held
that all animal husbandry products would fall within the
meaning of ‘products of livestock’ as defined under Section 2
(xv) of the Act. Further, the majority decision has also held
that the inclusion of “ghee” as a livestock product cannot be
faulted merely because it is derived from another dairy
product. It was observed by the High Court that even though
“ghee” is not directly obtained from milk, which is a product of
livestock, it would still be a “ product of a product of livestock” .
The relevant portion of the judgment of the High Court is as
under:
“Scientifically or common sense point of
view, even though ghee is not directly
obtained from milk (which is certainly a
product of cow/buffalo), it is certainly a
product of a product of livestock i.e., cow or
buffalo. It would be rather illogical or
irrational to say that ghee is not a milk/dairy
product or to say that it is not a product of
livestock. Ghee is certainly a product of
livestock. It is, therefore, to be seen whether
ghee comes within the definition of product
of livestock or within the meaning of notified
product of livestock. Section 2(x) and 2(xv) of
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the Act used the plural ‘products of
livestock’. The legislative intention is very
clear that not only a product of livestock like
milk (when notified by the Government),
butter etc., are products of livestock but even
derivative items (derived from a product of
livestock) are intended to be product of
livestock for the purpose of the Act. We are
convinced that the term ‘ghee’ has to be
interpreted on the basis of expression
‘products of livestock’ as defined in Section
2(xv) of the Act. Whatever products are
declared as such by the Government by
notification, they become products of
livestock for purposes of the Act.”
Another case of which a reference must be made here is the
decision taken by this Court in Park Leather Industry (P)
LTD. v. State of U.P. and Others (2001) 3 SCC 135. In this
case, the Supreme Court was dealing with the provisions of
U.P. Krishi Utpadan Mandi Adhiniyam, 1964, which has a
provision dealing with similar issues as are there before this
Court. In the U.P. Act, “agricultural produce” was widely
defined and it included inter alia produce of animal husbandry
which were specified in the schedule. In the schedule, one of
the items was prescribed under the head “animal husbandry
products” was “hides and skins”. The question was whether
tanned leather would come within the term “hides and skins”
or not? This Court held that the term “tanned leather” can be
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included under “hides and skins”, for the purposes of the Act
and more importantly for the purposes of payment of “market
fee”. The reason being that although while making a leather
into “tanned leather” a process of cleaning, curing and adding
preservatives may be adopted, yet the finished product which
is “tanned leather” though different in physical appearance or
even chemical combination and even commercially a different
item still remains “leather” and would come under the
definition of “hides and skins”. The same reasoning has been
adopted by the Full Bench of Andhra Pradesh High Court that
‘Ghee’ is derived out of ‘milk’ by undergoing a process, yet it
still remains a product of livestock, for the purposes of the Act
and payment of “market fee”.
We are absolutely in agreement with the above reasoning.
11. The second argument of the appellant that the procedure given
under Section 3 of the Act has not been followed, is also not
correct. There is a basic difference between the notification
which has to be made under Section 3 of the Act and the
notification which has to be made subsequently under Section
4 of the Act. What has to be done under Section 3 is a one-
time measure where the Government notifies an area where
purchase and sale of agricultural produce, livestock and
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products of livestock can be made. This is a one-time exercise.
What happens under Section 4 of the Act is that the Govt.
declares the ‘notified market area’ in respect of any notified
product (products which have already been notified under
section 3 of the Act). A perusal of Sections 3 and 4 of the Act
clearly shows that whereas a draft notification is mandatory
under Section 3 and so is the hearing of objections to the draft
notification, there is no similar provision under Section 4 of
the Act.
The two Sections of the Act Section 3 and Section 4 are
being reproduced below for a comparative analysis :
| Section 3 | Section 4 |
|---|---|
| 3. Declaration of notified<br>area :–<br>(1) The Government may<br>publish in such manner as<br>may be prescribed a draft<br>notification declaring their<br>intention of regulating the<br>purchase and sale of such<br>agricultural produce,<br>livestock or products of<br>livestock in such area as<br>may be specified in such<br>notification.<br>(2) Such notification shall<br>state that any objections or | 4. Constitution of Market<br>Committee and<br>declaration of notified<br>market area :-<br>(1) The Government shall<br>constitute, by notification,<br>a market committee for<br>every notified area from<br>such date as may be<br>specified in the notification<br>and the market committee<br>so constituted shall be a<br>body corporate by such<br>name as the Government<br>may specify in the said<br>notification, having<br>perpetual succession and a<br>common seal with power to |
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| suggestions which may be<br>received by the Government<br>from any person within a<br>period to be specified therein<br>will be considered by them.<br>(3) After the expiration of<br>the period specified in the<br>draft notification and after<br>considering such objections<br>and suggestions as may be<br>received before such<br>expiration, the Government<br>may publish in such<br>manner as may be<br>prescribed a final<br>notification declaring the<br>area specified in the draft<br>notification or any portion<br>thereof, to be a notified area<br>for the purposes of this Act<br>in respect of any agricultural<br>produce, livestock and<br>products of livestock<br>specified in the draft<br>notification.<br>(4) Subject to the provisions<br>of sub-sections (1), (2) and<br>(3), the Government may, by<br>notification –<br>(a) exclude from a notified<br>area, any area comprised<br>therein; or<br>(b) include in any notified<br>area, any area specified in<br>such notification; or<br>(c) declare a new notified<br>area by separation of area<br>from any notified area or by<br>uniting two or more notified<br>areas or parts thereof or by | acquire, hold and dispose<br>of property and may, by its<br>corporate name, sue and be<br>sued:<br>Provided that any<br>market committee<br>functioning immediately<br>before such constitution in<br>respect of a notified area<br>abolished under the<br>proviso to clause(c) of sub-<br>section (4) of section 3 shall<br>stand abolished.<br>(1-A) Any notification made<br>under sub-section (1) for<br>the constitution of a new<br>market committee in<br>respect of any new notified<br>are declared under clause<br>(c) of sub-section (4) of<br>section 3, may contain<br>such supplemental,<br>incidental and<br>consequential provisions,<br>including provisions as to<br>the composition of the new<br>market committee or new<br>and existing market<br>committees and the<br>apportionment of the<br>assets and liabilities<br>between the market<br>committees affected<br>thereby].<br>[(1-B) Notwithstanding<br>anything contained in<br>Section 3 and in sub-<br>section (1) and (1-A) of<br>Section 4 of the Act, the<br>Government, may, by<br>notification, also<br>constitution a separate<br>market committee to a |
|---|
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| uniting any area to a part of<br>any notified area;<br>Provided that where, as<br>result of declaration of a new<br>notified area under this<br>clause, the entire area<br>comprised in an existing<br>notified area is united to one<br>or more notified areas, the<br>said existing notified are<br>shall stand abolished. | special market in a notified<br>area.]<br>(2) It shall be the duty of the<br>market committee to<br>enforce the provisions of<br>this Act and rules and bye-<br>laws made thereunder in<br>the notified area<br>(3) (a) Every market<br>committee shall establish<br>in the notified area<br>excluding the scheduled<br>areas such number of<br>markets as the Government<br>may, from time to time,<br>direct for the purchase and<br>sale of any notified<br>agricultural produce,<br>livestock or products of<br>livestock and shall provide<br>such facilities in the market<br>as may be specified by the<br>Government, from time to<br>time, by a general or special<br>order.<br>(b) Every market committee<br>shall also establish in the<br>notified area such number<br>of markets as the<br>Government may, from<br>time to time, direct for the<br>purchase and sale, solely of<br>vegetables or fruits and<br>shall provide such facilities<br>in the market as may be<br>specified by the<br>Government, from time to<br>time, by a general or special<br>order.<br>[(bb) Every market<br>committee may also<br>establish in the notified |
|---|
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| area such number of<br>special market as the<br>Government may from time<br>to time direct for the<br>purchase and sale of any<br>notified agricultural<br>produce, livestock or<br>products of livestock or<br>fruits and vegetable and<br>may provide such facilities<br>in the special market as<br>may be specified by the<br>Government from time to<br>time, by a general or special<br>order.]<br>[(bbb) Every Market<br>Committee may also<br>declare in the notified area<br>any warehouse or cold<br>storage or processing unit<br>or any other place as a<br>market by following the<br>procedure as may be<br>prescribed.]3<br>[(c) The Market Committee<br>shall specify the limits of<br>every market established or<br>declared as a market by it<br>and the Government may<br>notify the market with such<br>limits, to be notified market<br>area for the purposes of<br>this Act.]4<br>[(4) As soon as may be after<br>the establishment of a<br>market under sub-section<br>(3), the Government shall<br>declare by the notification<br>the market area such other<br>area adjoining thereto as |
|---|
3
Added by the Andhra Pradesh (Agricultural Produce and Livestock) Markets (Amendment) Act, 2015.
4
Subs. by Ibid.
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| may be specified in the<br>notification, to be notified<br>market area for the<br>purpose of this Act in<br>respect of any notified<br>agricultural produce,<br>livestock or products of<br>livestock.<br>(5) Subject to the provisions<br>of sub-sections (1), (2),(3)<br>and (4), the Government<br>may, by notification –<br>(a) exclude from a notified<br>market area, any area<br>comprised therein; or<br>(b) include in any notified<br>market area, any area<br>specified in such<br>notification.]5 |
|---|
majority opinion in the Full Bench concluded that procedural
compliance is only necessary when there is a declaration or
later a merger/de-merger of a notified area and there is no
requirement of following any particular procedure while
issuing a notification under Section 4 (4) of the Act
notifying/de-notifying any already notified products for the
purpose of regulation by any respective Agricultural Market
Committee (AMC). In other words, a prior hearing or prior
5
Omitted vide the Andhra Pradesh (Agricultural Produce and Livestock) Markets (Amendment) Act, 2015.
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publication of the draft notification is not a requirement under
Section 4 of the Act, since the notification of the year 1994 is
a notification under Section 4 and not of Section 3 of the Act.
Therefore, the argument that the process under Section 3, has
not been followed is totally misconceived. No prior process
was required to be followed as contemplated under Section 3
of the Act for working the scheme under Section 4 of the Act.
Consequently, we hold that there was nothing wrong in the
1994 notification and the challenge to the notification has
rightly been turned down by the Full Bench of the Andhra
Pradesh High Court.
12. We are now left with one more issue related to the market fee.
Since the 1994 notification had an effect which made ‘Ghee’ a
product that could be regulated under provisions of the Act,
Market Committees were empowered to levy fee on the sale and
purchase of ‘ghee’ as per section 12 of the Act. During the
pendency of the matter before the High Court, the appellants
were not required to pay market fee as they were granted
interim protection by the High Court. After the majority
decision of the High Court in Kommissetty Nammalwar
(Supra ), market committees started issuing demand notices to
the producers of ‘Ghee’ asking them to pay fees from the date
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of the notification in the year 1994 to the date of the High
Court judgment i.e. 01.05.2009. This issue was also raised by
appellants in the present appeals and it was prayed that they
should be exempted from paying the fee to the market
committees prior to the High Court judgment. This Court while
issuing the notices in present matters, vide interim order,
restrained market committees from collecting the market fees
for the period prior to the High Court judgment. Even some of
the present appeals were heard on this limited question.
13. As per section 4(2) of the Act, the Market Committee has the
duty to enforce the provisions of the Act within a notified area.
Section 4(3), which empowers Market Committees to establish
markets within the notified area, also directs that these
Market Committees have to provide facilities in the markets
for the purchase and sale of notified products. Appellants’
argument that these Market Committees did not provide any
facilities has already been dealt with and rejected by the High
Court and we are also of the same view as that taken by the
High Court. The appellants have availed the facility given by
the Market Committee and hence they are liable to pay the fee.
There may also be a question of unjust enrichment here. For
all these reasons, we are of the opinion that this market fee
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should be paid as well. The appellants' prayer that
Respondent Market Committees should be restrained from
collecting market fees prior to the date of the High Court
Judgment cannot be accepted. All the same, since this fee
which has now accumulated for more than 14 years between
05.07.1994 to 01.05.2009 may entail some hardship on the
appellants, they shall be permitted to deposit this fee with the
Committee within two years from today, in four equal
instalments.
14. Consequently, we dismiss these appeals and uphold the
majority decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court. The
interim orders passed by this Court in the present batch of
cases where we had restrained the respondents from collecting
market fees prior to the date of the High Court judgment
during the pendency of these appeals, stand vacated.
……...……….………………….J.
[SUDHANSHU DHULIA]
..….....………………………….J.
[S.V.N. BHATTI]
New Delhi.
March 05, 2024.